New Crocodyliforms from Southwestern Europe and Definition of a Diverse Clade of European Late Cretaceous Basal Eusuchians
Abstract
<div><p>The late Campanian-early Maastrichtian site of Lo Hueco (Cuenca, Spain) has provided a set of well-preserved crocodyliform skull and lower jaw remains, which are described here and assigned to a new basal eusuchian taxon, <i>Lohuecosuchus megadontos</i> gen. et sp. nov. The reevaluation of a complete skull from the synchronous site of Fox-Amphoux (Department of Var, France) allows us to define a second species of this new genus. Phylogenetic analysis places <i>Lohuecosuchus</i> in a clade exclusively composed by European Late Cretaceous taxa. This new clade, defined here as Allodaposuchidae, is recognized as the sister group of Hylaeochampsidae, also comprised of European Cretaceous forms. Allodaposuchidae and Hylaeochampsidae are grouped in a clade identified as the sister group of Crocodylia, the only crocodyliform lineage that reaches our days. Allodaposuchidae shows a vicariant distribution pattern in the European Late Cretaceous archipelago, with several Ibero-Armorican forms more closely related to each other than with to Romanian <i>Allodaposuchus precedens</i>.</p></div- Dataset
- Dataset
- Molecular Biology
- Evolutionary Biology
- Ecology
- Environmental Sciences not elsewhere classified
- Biological Sciences not elsewhere classified
- Campanian-early Maastrichtian site
- clade
- Allodaposuchidae
- Cretaceous Basal Eusuchians
- vicariant distribution pattern
- basal eusuchian taxon
- Lohuecosuchus megadontos gen
- Hylaeochampsidae
- Phylogenetic analysis places Lohuecosuchus
- well-preserved crocodyliform skull
- sister group
- Romanian Allodaposuchus precedens
- European Cretaceous forms